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author | Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> | 2009-07-30 16:03:45 -0600 |
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committer | Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> | 2009-07-30 16:03:45 +0930 |
commit | 2e04ef76916d1e29a077ea9d0f2003c8fd86724d (patch) | |
tree | 2ff8d625d6e467be9f9f1b67a3674cb6e125e970 /drivers/lguest/lguest_device.c | |
parent | e969fed542cae08cb11d666efac4f7c5d624d09f (diff) | |
download | lwn-2e04ef76916d1e29a077ea9d0f2003c8fd86724d.tar.gz lwn-2e04ef76916d1e29a077ea9d0f2003c8fd86724d.zip |
lguest: fix comment style
I don't really notice it (except to begrudge the extra vertical
space), but Ingo does. And he pointed out that one excuse of lguest
is as a teaching tool, it should set a good example.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/lguest/lguest_device.c')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/lguest/lguest_device.c | 150 |
1 files changed, 97 insertions, 53 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/lguest/lguest_device.c b/drivers/lguest/lguest_device.c index e082cdac88b4..cc000e79c3d1 100644 --- a/drivers/lguest/lguest_device.c +++ b/drivers/lguest/lguest_device.c @@ -1,10 +1,12 @@ -/*P:050 Lguest guests use a very simple method to describe devices. It's a +/*P:050 + * Lguest guests use a very simple method to describe devices. It's a * series of device descriptors contained just above the top of normal Guest * memory. * * We use the standard "virtio" device infrastructure, which provides us with a * console, a network and a block driver. Each one expects some configuration - * information and a "virtqueue" or two to send and receive data. :*/ + * information and a "virtqueue" or two to send and receive data. +:*/ #include <linux/init.h> #include <linux/bootmem.h> #include <linux/lguest_launcher.h> @@ -20,8 +22,10 @@ /* The pointer to our (page) of device descriptions. */ static void *lguest_devices; -/* For Guests, device memory can be used as normal memory, so we cast away the - * __iomem to quieten sparse. */ +/* + * For Guests, device memory can be used as normal memory, so we cast away the + * __iomem to quieten sparse. + */ static inline void *lguest_map(unsigned long phys_addr, unsigned long pages) { return (__force void *)ioremap_cache(phys_addr, PAGE_SIZE*pages); @@ -32,8 +36,10 @@ static inline void lguest_unmap(void *addr) iounmap((__force void __iomem *)addr); } -/*D:100 Each lguest device is just a virtio device plus a pointer to its entry - * in the lguest_devices page. */ +/*D:100 + * Each lguest device is just a virtio device plus a pointer to its entry + * in the lguest_devices page. + */ struct lguest_device { struct virtio_device vdev; @@ -41,9 +47,11 @@ struct lguest_device { struct lguest_device_desc *desc; }; -/* Since the virtio infrastructure hands us a pointer to the virtio_device all +/* + * Since the virtio infrastructure hands us a pointer to the virtio_device all * the time, it helps to have a curt macro to get a pointer to the struct - * lguest_device it's enclosed in. */ + * lguest_device it's enclosed in. + */ #define to_lgdev(vd) container_of(vd, struct lguest_device, vdev) /*D:130 @@ -55,7 +63,8 @@ struct lguest_device { * the driver will look at them during setup. * * A convenient routine to return the device's virtqueue config array: - * immediately after the descriptor. */ + * immediately after the descriptor. + */ static struct lguest_vqconfig *lg_vq(const struct lguest_device_desc *desc) { return (void *)(desc + 1); @@ -98,10 +107,12 @@ static u32 lg_get_features(struct virtio_device *vdev) return features; } -/* The virtio core takes the features the Host offers, and copies the - * ones supported by the driver into the vdev->features array. Once - * that's all sorted out, this routine is called so we can tell the - * Host which features we understand and accept. */ +/* + * The virtio core takes the features the Host offers, and copies the ones + * supported by the driver into the vdev->features array. Once that's all + * sorted out, this routine is called so we can tell the Host which features we + * understand and accept. + */ static void lg_finalize_features(struct virtio_device *vdev) { unsigned int i, bits; @@ -112,10 +123,11 @@ static void lg_finalize_features(struct virtio_device *vdev) /* Give virtio_ring a chance to accept features. */ vring_transport_features(vdev); - /* The vdev->feature array is a Linux bitmask: this isn't the - * same as a the simple array of bits used by lguest devices - * for features. So we do this slow, manual conversion which is - * completely general. */ + /* + * The vdev->feature array is a Linux bitmask: this isn't the same as a + * the simple array of bits used by lguest devices for features. So we + * do this slow, manual conversion which is completely general. + */ memset(out_features, 0, desc->feature_len); bits = min_t(unsigned, desc->feature_len, sizeof(vdev->features)) * 8; for (i = 0; i < bits; i++) { @@ -146,15 +158,19 @@ static void lg_set(struct virtio_device *vdev, unsigned int offset, memcpy(lg_config(desc) + offset, buf, len); } -/* The operations to get and set the status word just access the status field - * of the device descriptor. */ +/* + * The operations to get and set the status word just access the status field + * of the device descriptor. + */ static u8 lg_get_status(struct virtio_device *vdev) { return to_lgdev(vdev)->desc->status; } -/* To notify on status updates, we (ab)use the NOTIFY hypercall, with the - * descriptor address of the device. A zero status means "reset". */ +/* + * To notify on status updates, we (ab)use the NOTIFY hypercall, with the + * descriptor address of the device. A zero status means "reset". + */ static void set_status(struct virtio_device *vdev, u8 status) { unsigned long offset = (void *)to_lgdev(vdev)->desc - lguest_devices; @@ -200,13 +216,17 @@ struct lguest_vq_info void *pages; }; -/* When the virtio_ring code wants to prod the Host, it calls us here and we +/* + * When the virtio_ring code wants to prod the Host, it calls us here and we * make a hypercall. We hand the physical address of the virtqueue so the Host - * knows which virtqueue we're talking about. */ + * knows which virtqueue we're talking about. + */ static void lg_notify(struct virtqueue *vq) { - /* We store our virtqueue information in the "priv" pointer of the - * virtqueue structure. */ + /* + * We store our virtqueue information in the "priv" pointer of the + * virtqueue structure. + */ struct lguest_vq_info *lvq = vq->priv; kvm_hypercall1(LHCALL_NOTIFY, lvq->config.pfn << PAGE_SHIFT); @@ -215,7 +235,8 @@ static void lg_notify(struct virtqueue *vq) /* An extern declaration inside a C file is bad form. Don't do it. */ extern void lguest_setup_irq(unsigned int irq); -/* This routine finds the first virtqueue described in the configuration of +/* + * This routine finds the first virtqueue described in the configuration of * this device and sets it up. * * This is kind of an ugly duckling. It'd be nicer to have a standard @@ -225,7 +246,8 @@ extern void lguest_setup_irq(unsigned int irq); * simpler for the Host to simply tell us where the pages are. * * So we provide drivers with a "find the Nth virtqueue and set it up" - * function. */ + * function. + */ static struct virtqueue *lg_find_vq(struct virtio_device *vdev, unsigned index, void (*callback)(struct virtqueue *vq), @@ -244,9 +266,11 @@ static struct virtqueue *lg_find_vq(struct virtio_device *vdev, if (!lvq) return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM); - /* Make a copy of the "struct lguest_vqconfig" entry, which sits after + /* + * Make a copy of the "struct lguest_vqconfig" entry, which sits after * the descriptor. We need a copy because the config space might not - * be aligned correctly. */ + * be aligned correctly. + */ memcpy(&lvq->config, lg_vq(ldev->desc)+index, sizeof(lvq->config)); printk("Mapping virtqueue %i addr %lx\n", index, @@ -261,8 +285,10 @@ static struct virtqueue *lg_find_vq(struct virtio_device *vdev, goto free_lvq; } - /* OK, tell virtio_ring.c to set up a virtqueue now we know its size - * and we've got a pointer to its pages. */ + /* + * OK, tell virtio_ring.c to set up a virtqueue now we know its size + * and we've got a pointer to its pages. + */ vq = vring_new_virtqueue(lvq->config.num, LGUEST_VRING_ALIGN, vdev, lvq->pages, lg_notify, callback, name); if (!vq) { @@ -273,18 +299,23 @@ static struct virtqueue *lg_find_vq(struct virtio_device *vdev, /* Make sure the interrupt is allocated. */ lguest_setup_irq(lvq->config.irq); - /* Tell the interrupt for this virtqueue to go to the virtio_ring - * interrupt handler. */ - /* FIXME: We used to have a flag for the Host to tell us we could use + /* + * Tell the interrupt for this virtqueue to go to the virtio_ring + * interrupt handler. + * + * FIXME: We used to have a flag for the Host to tell us we could use * the interrupt as a source of randomness: it'd be nice to have that - * back.. */ + * back. + */ err = request_irq(lvq->config.irq, vring_interrupt, IRQF_SHARED, dev_name(&vdev->dev), vq); if (err) goto destroy_vring; - /* Last of all we hook up our 'struct lguest_vq_info" to the - * virtqueue's priv pointer. */ + /* + * Last of all we hook up our 'struct lguest_vq_info" to the + * virtqueue's priv pointer. + */ vq->priv = lvq; return vq; @@ -358,11 +389,14 @@ static struct virtio_config_ops lguest_config_ops = { .del_vqs = lg_del_vqs, }; -/* The root device for the lguest virtio devices. This makes them appear as - * /sys/devices/lguest/0,1,2 not /sys/devices/0,1,2. */ +/* + * The root device for the lguest virtio devices. This makes them appear as + * /sys/devices/lguest/0,1,2 not /sys/devices/0,1,2. + */ static struct device *lguest_root; -/*D:120 This is the core of the lguest bus: actually adding a new device. +/*D:120 + * This is the core of the lguest bus: actually adding a new device. * It's a separate function because it's neater that way, and because an * earlier version of the code supported hotplug and unplug. They were removed * early on because they were never used. @@ -371,14 +405,14 @@ static struct device *lguest_root; * * It's worth reading this carefully: we start with a pointer to the new device * descriptor in the "lguest_devices" page, and the offset into the device - * descriptor page so we can uniquely identify it if things go badly wrong. */ + * descriptor page so we can uniquely identify it if things go badly wrong. + */ static void add_lguest_device(struct lguest_device_desc *d, unsigned int offset) { struct lguest_device *ldev; - /* Start with zeroed memory; Linux's device layer seems to count on - * it. */ + /* Start with zeroed memory; Linux's device layer counts on it. */ ldev = kzalloc(sizeof(*ldev), GFP_KERNEL); if (!ldev) { printk(KERN_EMERG "Cannot allocate lguest dev %u type %u\n", @@ -390,15 +424,19 @@ static void add_lguest_device(struct lguest_device_desc *d, ldev->vdev.dev.parent = lguest_root; /* We have a unique device index thanks to the dev_index counter. */ ldev->vdev.id.device = d->type; - /* We have a simple set of routines for querying the device's - * configuration information and setting its status. */ + /* + * We have a simple set of routines for querying the device's + * configuration information and setting its status. + */ ldev->vdev.config = &lguest_config_ops; /* And we remember the device's descriptor for lguest_config_ops. */ ldev->desc = d; - /* register_virtio_device() sets up the generic fields for the struct + /* + * register_virtio_device() sets up the generic fields for the struct * virtio_device and calls device_register(). This makes the bus - * infrastructure look for a matching driver. */ + * infrastructure look for a matching driver. + */ if (register_virtio_device(&ldev->vdev) != 0) { printk(KERN_ERR "Failed to register lguest dev %u type %u\n", offset, d->type); @@ -406,8 +444,10 @@ static void add_lguest_device(struct lguest_device_desc *d, } } -/*D:110 scan_devices() simply iterates through the device page. The type 0 is - * reserved to mean "end of devices". */ +/*D:110 + * scan_devices() simply iterates through the device page. The type 0 is + * reserved to mean "end of devices". + */ static void scan_devices(void) { unsigned int i; @@ -426,7 +466,8 @@ static void scan_devices(void) } } -/*D:105 Fairly early in boot, lguest_devices_init() is called to set up the +/*D:105 + * Fairly early in boot, lguest_devices_init() is called to set up the * lguest device infrastructure. We check that we are a Guest by checking * pv_info.name: there are other ways of checking, but this seems most * obvious to me. @@ -437,7 +478,8 @@ static void scan_devices(void) * correct sysfs incantation). * * Finally we call scan_devices() which adds all the devices found in the - * lguest_devices page. */ + * lguest_devices page. + */ static int __init lguest_devices_init(void) { if (strcmp(pv_info.name, "lguest") != 0) @@ -456,11 +498,13 @@ static int __init lguest_devices_init(void) /* We do this after core stuff, but before the drivers. */ postcore_initcall(lguest_devices_init); -/*D:150 At this point in the journey we used to now wade through the lguest +/*D:150 + * At this point in the journey we used to now wade through the lguest * devices themselves: net, block and console. Since they're all now virtio * devices rather than lguest-specific, I've decided to ignore them. Mostly, * they're kind of boring. But this does mean you'll never experience the * thrill of reading the forbidden love scene buried deep in the block driver. * * "make Launcher" beckons, where we answer questions like "Where do Guests - * come from?", and "What do you do when someone asks for optimization?". */ + * come from?", and "What do you do when someone asks for optimization?". + */ |